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Advertisements nol having the number of insertion's marked on them, will be continued until -ordered oat, aud.chatged accordingly. All communications addressed to the Editor, post paid. will be promptly and strictly aueaded to. -m gAdaF AugoatN A mi r. - - A LIFF.4tYMN. NT WLLt'aU*3&ae lue is Mre. i 'iede is " Af isgraw *wsplaa the Eadridng as its Maker a Unquenchable by deats The body moulders dust to dust, 'Tis but the casket gone; Amid the sinful or the just. The spirit-gem lives on! Time is a fragment of our life, This side the mortal goal; A day, an hour, how brier, yet rife With moment to the soul! Beyond the narrow bounds of Time, To mortal ken unknown Death open the portals to a clime, Where spirit dwells alone. There we shall live. as each shall bear Time's impress on the soul; The just shall robes of honor wear, While bliseful ages roll. The spirit stained by guilt and crime Unwept and unforgiven. Shall never rise to joys sublime The heritage or Heaven. Guard well thy life, oh ! man; for know Its destiny wvill be For future weal, ot future wo, As time shall pass with thee ! Psjded, Ga. Frou the Autgusta Mirror. IN PROMPTU. I. When o'er the brow of loveflness. A blush hath found its purple way, Andi uantling 'neath each raven tress, The conscious ahe-would shrink away ; II. When love in melking accents pour'd, And bands entwin'd, and eyes that speak When expeetation seals tian lip And bids tiae heart in transport break; Oh! turn not from that lovely scene, Frown not. cold moralist. or starl; 'Ti. sweet to be what few have been The p:rtner ora guileless heart. sa.au. 4Agusts, Ga. THE CEOLIAN HARP. *"It was a chorus of the winda thr~t store Its silence from the night. and seetn'd to plaj A momentary dirge-as ifthe soul Of harmony hasd died and passed away. Nlow to the air it gave a solemn peal. And en the hearing in sad concord hung ; Anon in trembling dau=e di it steal, TJill not one nao offiint vibration ruing. Again it breathes In ftful murmuring. Now enertlaus and low, now fnll and clear Bern on the midnight gal's mystsriend wing Like ange!-echees fkom a dir-tint sphere."' 'w~n I Amy perse of common observatio. a4 I at alLinterustal in. such.. subjecto, canatl i fail to observe the imamense quantities ul - manure which are absolutely thrown away P on our farms, in our cities, and about. on# roadi atidhuilditigi, What a bleoing ii would be, if we bad -something of the re ported frugplity of the Chinese, on the seore of cleanliness and heahb, as well as interest.' How few farmers even think of saving their sbap suds, and yet it is a most valuable manure; and by having a vault or pool in which to deposite a pile of loam, or large heap bf earth, by regularly throw I ing the contents of the wash tul.Upon it, it might be converted into the means of grietily enriching the land, and what tons of the most valuable liquid manure, by'a littfe pains-taking and contrivance, might be obtained'in the city; by farmers, who are now willing to cotme four and six miles and transport fire-fanged and dried horse manure at a cost, before it reached their arms, of six. and dight dollars a-cord. The French are now taking great pains to save the- water in. which. the. wool is washed at the woolen factiries, fall as it is of soap and anissal oil, and fnd it a most valuable applicition .do their lands. We have long knowd the value of ruse wool; iand we have stood by the mill-shuts in Lowell Inore than once with feelings of serious regret, when -we have seen the wash from their woollen factory, full of enriching matters, mingling with the wa ters of the riher and pussiug of into the ocean, as so much valuable material abso lutely thrown-away. Our highly respectable friend Bement, of Albany, has saade some verv success feilezperitnents with bogs' istles, -ap plied in potatoe hills and it other forms. Uespeaks ofaheir beneficialeffects as quite remarkable. Hoy To turaoyS A PooM ,ILL SIDZE. Aed, poor, parched up. unproductive hill, is one of the most unacmly features belonging to a farm. There are, howev er, many ways of enriching.pQur spots of laud, but at. present ye.,wall mton bdt three imodes, 1st. l aulso sjabie manure, lea M t c'ds, often or foaf"ears the operaso utson ted, or swift determinations takes see. 2d. By sowing several of the grasses on the sanmc laud. and grazing stock upon it, it mav be enriched very fast. If this is the pIan adopted. after graing- two or three years at most, the land might he turned over in the fall and sown in wheat or rye-if in the laiter, it might he pastured till A pril. and then it would bear a corn crop. After taking off the wheat or Indi an corn, if clover had been upon the ground, a good stand will soon appear. When this is the case, it may be grazed the second and third years, or if desired, a crop of bay may be taken ol each season, and then it will atford some good grasting. By managing land thus, it may he made very rich in a few years, and yield a con stant profit to the ower. 3d. We do not enterrain a doubt, but Jerusalem Artichokes on hill sides, and enhausted spotsof land, if eaten in the win ter by hogs. will make land very rich. In the first place, Artichok-s altord abun dance of foliage which shades the ground in summer, and fall., after frost, is cover ed hv the rootinig of the hogw, and rots in a short time. In the second place, swine give large lutatlities of the very best mna nure, while rmuting after their food. We do tnt say that any one of the Foregoing modes is to be adopted to the rejection of the rest, but all should be pursdted as far as the farmer's means will permit.-aak oWe, (Tent..} Agriculturist. Frets the GOcuns Farmer'. TO OBTAtN oNioZE SEn. The best time to set out onions for seed is ahoot the middle of October. This is preferable to plenting them in the spring. s the bulbs will have time to throw out I bres and become well rooted; and they will producn more full and certain cropas of seed, than if deferred till the latter pe riod. Roots of a suitable size, and the hardest and best 'haped, should be selected, and *hen different varieties are to be raised, the roots of each variety should he-planted remote from the others, in order to pre clode any danger of their becoming mix ed. The gronud should be light, rich, and well dug, andi the onionishould be plamted in drills shout one foot tspurt, and from ii to nine iuches asunder in the drills. 'rhe drills should be dlug about five inches deep, the bulbs placed evenly ian the bottom, and then covered at least three inches above their crowns with earth. It will be most convenient to make the drills by a line stretched over the grotund, and to complete one before another is commenced. The plants will appear above ground early in spring, and in the early parn o summer will have att ained their full height o order to support the stalks, and prevenl the weight of newly formed seed fron breaking them down, stakes should be .diven,ln all the drills, at distancesof a feel fetin each, and pack-thread. or small pie c.. of bs at in; run in double linei along tdierow of stakes. passing on each de of the stems, a litile below thse heads them. double lines may be connected at in tervals by shon pieces-tied scro. When the seeds are ripe, the heads are cut of. sprisad thinly over cloths or news papers to become thoroughly dry, and af terwards shelled out by rubbing. cleaned and preserved. Ie Ash Seutherailanter. CORS COWs FOR CATTLE. C. T. Botts.-My Dear Sir.-I am much pleased with your recommendation ofcob meal in the last number ofthe Plan ter. I am perfectly satisfied of the value. ofit. Having understood' that Col. Bur root, of Chesterfield, never wained a cob, bit considered it capital-feed. I took some pains to discover his mode of using them. It is as follows; Whenever he shells corn or mill, the cobs are thrown 'into a half hogshead of. salt and waier. to which his cows tave acess. By te time he sends to mill again, there is plenty of room for more-cobs. I have tried this plan with gre.tsuccess. The cobs are hardly soak' ed by the silt water. before they are eager ly devoured by my, cattle. I would as soon think of throwing away my fodder as my corn cobs. Yours, A. R. S. We have understood, upon inquiry, that Col. Burfoot now boils his cobs, instead of soaking them. He breaks them wih an axe, and throws them into his feed kettle, and we ore assured that there is no por tion of its contents that are preferred to these bits of corn cob. These plans are no doubt both good; much better ithan ilirewing away an arti cle thatcontmins so munh nutriment; but, where it could be done conveniently, we should greatly prefer to relieve the animal from tie labor.add trouble, which bee r iuet only half performs, grindin b." Bees, when grotind, it is - either horse or'cattle. If its qulities are admitted, there much reas110 i grinding t grinding the grain. The following arti able su is C7Pcl1ip - town A M1. cDo is cate it. per, tis: my lellA benefit of its adoption, The1 plan is this:-The shingling have a small sin cap at their breast, by a btring pass: g a the neck; into this cup is put a P. white lead. ground in oil, of the cN as taken from the keg; as the workman handles the nail h- dips the point into thw white lead is forc- .ip as the nail passes in, and compietely fills up tie hole and the head of the nA.i is embedded in the paint -thus preventing water from penetrating by the nail hole and the rust of the nail. Ihe progress of the workmen is very little relarded by the operation-a keg of twen ty five pounds will do for about ten thou sand shingles. The same process might be advantageous in weather-boarding toanid in putting on the decks and hurricane roof of steamboats. JAMES L. BROWN. vALUABLE RECtPE. The worst casis of cholera-morhus, dy sentery, bloody flux. &c., that over I saw, I haeve repeatedly cured in a few minutes, or hours, by a strong tea, made of the bark of the sweet gum-taksen green from the tree is best. $meep a handful to a pint of water, until the liquor is like good coffee, drink it clear or sweetenecd with loaf sugar. or add a gtass of good brandy, if thme shock is very severe. If not infallible, it is remarkable in its effects, and well worth being known and srid in every family. SOLON ROBISON. We can add our own testimony to the value of the sweet gumm tea, having expe rienced amazing and speedy relief from its use in a violent case of dysentery, which refuscd to yield to the usual remedies. We have olso seen, in the last five years, its wonderful effects in many other cases. We have used the decocm ion made from he bark bothbgreen and dried, and have discovered no material difference in the ef fet.; both being efficacious.-Pranklin Farmer. U5EPDOL ARTS. To make good shiaing Black lak. Take two oncees of nut-galls in coarse powder: one ounce of lugwood in thin chips: one ounce ofsulphate of iron ; three. fourhs of an ounce of gum arabic; one fourthb of an once of loaf sugar. Boil the galls and logwood together in three piots of water, till the quantity is reduced to one Ihalf. Then the liquor must be strained through a flannel into a proper vessel, and the remainder of the ingredients to he ad dd to it. The mixture is then to he stir red till the whole is dissolved ; after which it must be left at rest twenty-four hours. The ink may then he decanted from the gross sediment, and must be preserved in a .lass bottle well corkeed. reussiousal. of the Charleston Mercury. AhSst5OToN, Sept. 1. 1841 In ate, ihis mornlug, Mr. Wright press proceedings of the Democra ey of, wick County, Va. He said the -p lings related principally to the ebarter a Bank of the United States, and the p- e and resolutions contained a strong *and masterly argument agai constitutional power of Con gress er such an institution, and was uction of Gen. Dromgoole, the r Representative in Congress from- District. The document was ord printed. The Tariff Bill was then- p. but Mr. Berrien moved that the. ' the day might be postponed to e Bank Bill. This was oppo sed by .Rives at some length, and ad voc 'Messrs. Clay, of Kentucky and Berries some of the Democratic Sen ators. - motion was carried-Ayes 34, N 4. The bill was then taken up, and - Berrien spoke for nearly two hours il favor. Much the largest por tion of peech consisted of comments on est from the P. esident's Message at the g of the Session, and from the Vet sage. in which he argued that the bill was such as the former declara ofihe President would com pel b n, without he wished to put himsel' very unenviable attitude be fore the., ntry. Mr. replied at some 'length, and declare t he considered the bill equal ly ob' able with the former. It would a 'ze discounts in the form most Ia se-in that ofrhe kite hills and ra * Is, which have helped so much banking system odious. .. lee amendments were then of t 'ar - tic Senators, merely for c -:v exposlg the character of -* which were coolly voted oderal majprity. and the v..Wo be tken ott ordering the han Mr.Arcberex the Senate on adjournment, i tesub -a at - - - t y-, ..will he mhade lmmediately suixanzoTo . Sept. 2, 1841. n the 'Senate this morning, Mr. Cal :laun presented a copy of the proceedings of the Republicans of Amelia County, Virginia. reprobating in strong language, the measures of the present Session of Congress. After the transaction of some unimportant business, the Bank bill was taken up, and Mr. Archer spoke for two long hours. About one third or his re marks was devoted to denunciations of the octrine of nullification, and that he, him self, was par exrcellence. the champion of Stata Rights principlcs: another third to proving that the Fiscality in its present shape was perfectly constitttonall, though in its furmer shape it was entire'y uncon stitutional. To crente an institution with the power of discounting promissory notes, ws a gross usurpationi, dangerous, if not fatal in its tendency to ou fre institutions; but to create an institution with power to discont bills of exchange drawtn in New York, on Jersey City, or in Philadelphia, on Camden, n the oppogite side of the Delaware, was a muni6cienit exereise of expressly delegated power, and wvas abso lutely necessar'y to the pr'eserv'ation of the Republic. No one, he said would deny that Government had the right to parchase a bill of exchanige if it was necessary for the transmtission of funds to a distant par tion of the country, If it could buy A bill for a thousarnd dollars, it could for a million. If it enuld authorize the head of a De part meat, or en individual, to purchase this bill, it could authorize two or more indi viduals under the form of a corporation to do so; and, ifthey could authorize tis in stitton tO o deal in exchanges at all, they could authorize it to deal in the exchan ges of the whole country. The remain ing portion of his speechb was an eflhrt to show that Mr. Tyler could not consistent with hisiexpressed opinions, veto this bill; hat the doctrine oftrequiring the assent of the StatesP was a super absurdity, so far above comprehentsion that the $enator from South Carolina, (Mr. Calhoun) who was. perhaps the most astute man in the United States could not follow. Mr. Buchanan briefly, but most triumph antly replied to the arguments of' Messrs. Archer and Berrien in favor of the kite glying hscalityand contrasted some of their arguments with their pretensloos as es ponders of State Rights doctrines. The power of Governmient to purchase a hill of exchange when it was necessay, (said Mr. Archr) gave Congress the power to cre ... a Bank of twenty millions, to deal in the exchanges of the whole country, and to establish agencies in every State of the Union against their wishes. This was one specimen of strict construction. The Sea ator from Georgia (Mr. Berrien) yesterday contended that the power to regulate com merce, gave Congress the power to create a paper currency with which to carry on that commerce. This was another speci men of strict construction. He then an alyzed the fiscality, and demonstrated that it was infinitely more objectionable than the former bill, and if John Tyler should sign this bill, after taking the high and ele vated ground he bad done, in the veto mes sage, he would eternally disgrace himself. He remarked in conclusion, that the Whigs had been condemned for much of what they had done at the present Session, but they had done one thing for which they deser. ved the thanks of every lover of liberty throughout the world, and that was, they had most effiectually done for themselves. This brought up Mr. Clay of Kentucky. and the manner in which he commenced. led every one present to expect an erup. tion, nor were they disappointed. Mr. Buchanan, in reply to a remark of Mr. Archer, that he was better acquainted with what was going on at the White House than he (Mr. A.) was, playfully replied that he was not now, but hoped he soon would be. Mr. Clay took up this remark, and supposed it possible, and on this suppo sition poured out a torrent of denunciation on the head of John Tyler, in which the vocabulary of invective was exhausted, and conclusively established the reputation of the Speaker as the greatest rhetorical blackguard of the age. The desertion of his political friends by the President, (said Mr. C.) would he an act worse than trea sou, an act of moral turpitude, which had never been equalled in any age or country; he would be execrable, atrocious, infa. mous, and would Irender his name loath some in history; but, he thought this de sertion of his friends and his principles by the President to be uuerly impossible-the soil of Virginia was too pure to produce such a traitor. The discussion was furth. er continued by Messrs. Buchanan, Walk er. King, Wright, Linn, Calhoun and Preston. Mr. Calhoun in allusion to some remark by Mr. Clay, as to his visits to the White House, remarked that he had had no communication with the President for the last two mouths, but lie would take occasion tosay that he most heartily iproved of the late veto; and that he op the present bill, which he consider anhiely worse than the former would d ofor bill oabom os (the Distrition is support of his ad most cordially given. en rose and read a lecture propriety of the course the debate en, in which threats and intimida were used on the one side to deter the President from doing a certain act, and flatteries and promises used on the other to induce him to perpetrate the act. le fore he had concludedlhis remarks. he for got the object for which he said he had risen, and fell into the same strain of argument which he had rebuked at the commence ment of his speech. Mr. Calhoun replied that there were various ways !of making known their opinions in the President-one was by confidential intercourse] with the ccupantof the White House, the other was fur a Senator to state them in his place, in the Senate Chamber. It was a mere o,,ntter of inste between him and the Senator from Virginia, and he, (Mr. C.) preferred the latter mnode. Several efforts wer6t now made to get a vote on the en grossment of the bill, but Mr, Berrien in sisted on havinig an opportunity of answer ing the argument of Mr. Buchanan, and moved ati adljnnnmwent. The Democra:ic Senamoms expressed their willingness to hear him then, but he persisted in his mo tion, which was carried by the WVhig mna and the Senate adjoturned. The Ilonse debated for an hour on the McLeod resolution, then talked another hour on varions resolutions which were offered by members, and then adjourned. WastrI!GoYos Sept. 2. The Bank Bill (or rather Fiscal Cor poraion) is taken up to-day in the Senate. But little will be said concerning it. It will go in the President. and if in its pre setit shape, will nssuredty be vetoed-and then follows a dissolution of the Cabinet. It is understood that the President wilt sign the Land Distribution Bill. If so, the Democrats Cannot take office under him; andI his new Cahinet must be from the Whig party. Should this state of things occur, there is a end to his preten sions to the Presidency for another term. WAsatsoroN, Sept. 3. In Senate, this morning, Mr. Calhoun presented the proceedings of a large mee ting of Republicans of Clarke County, Virginia, which expressed iin stronge hut decorous language their disapprobation of the measures of the present session of Congress. and reviewed the promises and pledges of the Whig party during the re cenit Presidential canvass, which are still unredeemed, 'Ihey also warmly appro ved of the reent Veto of the President. Mr. C. moved that they might be read and ordered to be printed- The proceed ings were read, and the question being on ordering them to he printed. Mr. Preston, (who merely acted "Char ley." for the occasion,) opposed the mo tion to print, on the ground thatthey were disrespectful to the dominant party in the Senate, and mov# .z~at they be laid upon the table. This. otion preluding all re pt. Mr f''alhane, aske hatm it mipht be withdrawn, which, aft: some hestisks Mr. P. acceded to. Mr. Calhoun said, be held it to be aa inherent right of tbe people to mak-ta solves beard in the halls of eegislato.,'e all occasions on questions in which thy are interested, when their opinions are as pressed in decorous language; and be would challenge a comparison between the language oflhese proceedings and the whieb Senators were in the daily ahitof using in that chamber: it was far wore& corous than was used by Senators on t other sideyesterday. Were they to pre acribe a rule to the people of this countr. a rule which they 'bemselfes were in the daily habit of violating T He trused the motion to lay on the table would not pre vail. Mr. Preston then renewed his motion to lay on the table, without rising from his seat, and Mr. Benton proceeding to ad dress the Senate, he was called to order by Mr. P., but he was informed that having made his motion while sitting in his seat. it was unparliamentary, and passed for nothing. 1he Chairsusiained thIs opilon, and Mr. Benton reprobated in atog terms this attempt to stifle the voice ofthe freemen of this country, but the attempt would be utterly futile. Mr. Preston then commented at mach length on the proceedings, reading extracts therefrom, (which amused the Senate a good deal from the home truths it contain ed.) and fastened particularly on a remark that the majority bad been pressing their measures with "indecent haste." He ap pealed to the Senate with much gravity, to say if "indecent" was a decent word. He then renewed his motion to lay on the ta ble, and Mr. Calhoun requested him to withdraw it for the purpose of replying to some of his remarks, but he refused, and the motion to lay on the table was carried by a strict party vote. Mr. Benton then informed the Senators on the opposite side, that he had a docu ment ofsimilar tenor, from another c'oun ty in Virginia, which he would present to morrow, and as they would find its lan guage at least as objectionable as the one just on the table, he would take care to make his remarks on it before they got the opportunity of applying the gag by laying it on the table. The Botis' Bank bill was now taken up, and Mr. Simmons of Rhode Island, and Mr. Berrien addressed the Senate in its fa vor. The latter gentleman, in his usual prolix and tiresome manner, spoke for about an hour and a half in reply to Mr. Buchanan, aud man a toevadtbthree argument to p - late commene power of creating paper to carry on commerce-a doctrinew bh Henry Clay, a few years since, when it was ad vanced by Mr. Webster, most solemnly repudiated. When he had oncluded, the question was taken on ordering the bill to a third reading, and it was carried-eyes 27, noes 22-Mr. Rives voting against the bill, and Messrs. Bayard and Williams haviug paired off. The bill was then pas sed, and Mr. Clay expressing a wish to postpone taking up the tariff bill until to morrow, the Senate adjourned. In the House nothing of importance was done, and it adjourned about 12 o'clock. The Distributing bill has been signed by the President. Some of the whigs be gan to fear that it would be returned with a veto. The country would have had gread reason to rejoice had such been the result, and would have triumphantly &us tained the veto and its author despite the denunciations of the Great Dejected &ed his partisans. WVAsie-ozs, Sept. 4. In the Senate this morning, a hill fronr the Honse mnaking an appropriation of 8600,000 for naval stores ad ordinance was taken up, and after some discussion, Mr. Allen moved an amendment providing slat the mon~ey should be taken from the proceeds of the Public Land,. The amendment was lost, and the furtherecw sideration of the bill post poned ntil Morn dy7. The Tarift bill was theu takeO up, andW Mr. Clay went into his long delayed ex pose of the condition of the Treasry. The defich in she Treasury at the close of the year being the difference between the current revenue nd ibe current expendi' ture, will he silteen millions of dollars. The amount of appropriations, including the unexpended balatrees for the present year will be 830,616.560, and the actual expenditures of she year 828,500,000 Thbis is about seteu millions ofdotlatsmmer than were expended last year, and 'a the full6ilment of the promise of refrenchment in expenditure. Mr. Clay said if the tax es on tea and coffee were taken off it would inevitably produce a necessity of ralsing the other duties above 20 per cent. thus vo lating the compromise act, which he hoped might be preserved inviolate if the duties were retained on these articles. Mr. Car bonn replied with great power and afses to Mr. Clay. He commenced with mttch severity on the delay in making known the deplorable condition of the Treasury until it was announced that the PIesident had signed a bill diverting a large end impor tant branch of the public revenue firom its legitimate purposes. Ho asked the Sena tor where were the proposed relbrms and retrenchments that had bean so lavishly promised-intead of any attempt at te form, the whole Session had beea een sumed on projects for squandozing the public treasure--distrbutin-pproprt tions--Ioans-taxas-banks, iEC. lie. Us thought hat. witroer attentiono econ